Background
Lenzi was born in Massa Marittima, Grosseto, southern Tuscany.
Lenzi was born in Massa Marittima, Grosseto, southern Tuscany.
He is the writer/director of two highly controversial exploitation films: Eaten Alive! (1980) and Cannibal Ferox (1981) as well as the director of the film adaptation of the Italian comic book Kriminal (1966). He was one of the first Italian directors to get involved in the giallo film craze (along with Mario Bava and Dario Argento), and his jungle adventure Manitoba From Deep River is credited as being the film that started the Italian cannibal film genre later popularized by Ruggero Deodato, Jess Franco and others Lenzi has claimed in interviews however that he was never too enamored of the cannibal films he made, being much prouder of his war films, his police crime films and his westerns.
Lenzi has said in interviews that Manitoba From Deep River was his best cannibal film (he said he only did the other two to make a quick buck), and his favorite gialli were Orgasmo and Seven Bloodstained Orchids (while he absolutely detested Spasmo).
He said his Black Demons was another of his all-time favorites, a "potential masterpiece" marred only by the poor acting of the unattractive female lead he was forced to work with. Umberto Lenzi"s Orgasmo (1969) was retitled Paranoia when it was released in the United States of America, and it was so successful under that title, the Italian producers asked Lenzi to make another giallo called Paranoia (1970) to be distributed in Italy.
This second film was later retitled A Quiet Place to Kill in the United States of America (since Orgasmo had already been released there under the title Paranoia). While preparing to film the 1988 slasher flick Nightmare Beach in Florida, Umberto Lenzi had a falling out with the producer just as production started and wanted to be taken off the film, but the film"s co-writer Harry Kirkpatrick (who wound up receiving sole directing cr) convinced Lenzi to remain on the set in an uncredited advisory capacity throughout the entire production.
Thus Lenzi co-directed the film with Kirkpatrick.
Foreign years, many horror film fans thought Harry Kirkpatrick was an alias for Lenzi, but Lenzi has stated in interviews that there really was a Harry Kirkpatrick who co-wrote & co-directed that film with him. Umberto Lenzi directed Ghosthouse in 1988 (known as Louisiana Casa 3 in Italy), but many of his fans do not know why it was released as Louisiana Casa 3 in Italy. The American films The Evil Dead and Evil Dead II were released in Italy as Louisiana Casa and Louisiana Casa 2 respectively.
Lenzi"s film Ghosthouse was designed as a sort of sequel to these two high-grossing fan favorites, and thus was released in theatres there as Louisiana Casa 3.
The same year, Fabrizio Laurenti directed Witchery (starring Linda Blair) which was released in Italy as Louisiana Casa 4 and was followed several years later by Claudio Fragasso"s Louisiana Casa 5: Beyond Darkness (not to be confused with Joe Doctorate"Amato"s Beyond The Darkness / Buio Omega). The 1987 American movie House 2: The Second Story strangely wound up on video as Louisiana Casa 6, while the 1989 Lance Henrikson film The Horror Show was also known as Louisiana Casa 7.